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A03146 The history of the Sabbath In two bookes. By Pet. Heylyn. Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. 1636 (1636) STC 13274; ESTC S104023 323,918 504

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thereof not by the workmanship of the Stuffe but the glosse and colour In which it is most strange to see how suddainly men were induced not onely to give way unto it but without more adoe to abett the same till in the end and that in very little time it grew the most bewitching Errour the most popular Deceit that ever had beene set on foot in the Church of England And verily I perswade my selfe that many an honest and well-meaning man both of the Clergie and the Laitie either because of the appearance of the thing it selfe or out of some opinion of those men who first endevoured to promote it became exceedingly affected towards the same as taking it to be a Doctrine sent downe from Heaven for encrease of Pietie So easily did they beleeve it and grew at last so strongly possessed therewith that in the end they would not willingly be perswaded to conceive otherwise thereof than at first they did or thinke they swallowed downe the Hooke when they tooke the Bait. An Hooke indeed which had so fastned them to those men who love to fish in troubled waters that by this artifice there was no small hope conceived amongst them to fortifie their side and make good that cause which till this trimme Deceit was thought of was almost growne desperate Once I am sure that by this meanes the Brethren who before endeavoured to bring all Christian Kings and Princes under the yoke of their Presbyteries made little doubt to bring them under the command of their Sabbath Doctrines And though they failed of that applauded paritie which they so much aimed at in the advancing of their Elderships yet hoped they without more adoe to bring all higher Powers what ever into an equall ranke with the common people in the observance of their Iewish Sabbatarian rigours So Doctor Bound declares himselfe p. 171. The Magistrate saith hee and Governour in authoritie how high soever cannot take any priviledge to himselfe whereby he might be occupied about worldly businesse when other men should rest from labour It seemes they hoped to see the greatest Kings and Princes make suit unto their Consistorie for a Dispensation as often as the great Affaires of State or what cause soever induced them otherwise to spend that Day or any part or parcell of it than by the new Sabbath Doctrine had beene permitted For the endeering of the which as formerly to endeere their Elderships they spared no place or Text of Scripture where the word Elder did occurre and without going to the Heralds had framed a Pedigree thereof from ●ethro from Noahs Arke and from Adam finally so did these men proceed in their new Devices publishing out of holy Writ both the antiquitie and authoritie of their Sabbath day No passage of Gods Booke unransacked where there was mention of a Sabbath whether the legall Sabbath charged the Iewes or the spirituall Sabbath of the Soule from si●ne which was not fitted and applyed to the present purpose though if examined as it ought with no better reason than Paveant illi non paveam ego was by an ignorant Priest alledged from Scripture to prove that his Parishioners ought to pave the Chancell Yet upon confidence of these proofes they did alreadie begin to sing Victoria especially by reason of the entertainment which the said Doctrines found with the common people For thus the Doctor boasts himselfe in his second Edition anno 606. as before was said Many godly learned both in their Preachings Writings and Disputations did concurre with him in that argument and that the lives of many Christians in many places of the Kingdome were framed according to his Doctrine p. 61. Particularly in the Epistle to the Reader that within few yeeres three severall profitable Treatises successively were written by three godly learned Preachers Greenehams was one whose ever were the other two that in the mouth of two or three witnesses the doctrine of the Sabbath might bee established Egregiam verò laudem spolia ampla 8 But whatsoever cause hee had thus to boast himselfe in the successe of his new doctrines the Church I am sure had little cause to rejoyce thereat For what did follow hereupon but such monstrous paradoxes and those delivered in the pulpit as would make every good man tremble at the hearing of them First as my Author tells mee it was preached at a market towne in Oxfordshire that to doe any servile worke or businesse on the Lords day was as great a sinne as to kill a man or commit adultery Secondly preached in Somerset-shire t●at to throw a bowle on the Lords day was as great a sinne as to kill a man Thirdly in Norfolke that to make a feast or dresse a wedding dinner on the Lords day was as great a sinne as for a Father to take a knife and cut his childes throate Fourthly in Suffolke that to ring more bells then one on the Lords day was as great a sinne as to commit murder I adde what once I heard my selfe at Sergean●● Inne in Fleet-streete about five yeeres since that temporall death was at this day to be inflicted by the Law of God on the Sabbath-breaker on him that on the Lords day did the works of his daily calling with a grave application unto my masters of the Law that if they did their ordinary workes on the Sabbath day in taking fees and giving Counsell they should consider what they did deserve by the Law of God And certainely these and the like conclusions cannot but ●ollow most directly on the former principles For that the fourth Commandement bee plainely morall obliging us as straitely as it did the Iewes and that the Lords day bee to bee observed according to the prescript of that Commandment it must needs bee that every willfull breach thereof is of no lower nature then Idolatrie or blaspheming of the Name of GOD or any other deadly sinne against the first table and therefore questionlesse as great as murder or adultery or any sin against the second But to goe forwards where I left my Author whome before I spake of being present when the Suffolke Minister was convented for his so lewd and impious doctrine was the occasion that those Sabbatarian errours and impieties were first brought to light and to the knowledge of the state On which discovery as hee tells us this good ensued that the said bookes of the Sabbath were called in and forbidden to bee printed and made common Archbishop Whitguift by his letters and visitations did the one Ann● 1599. and Sir Iohn Popham Lord Chiefe Iustice did the other Ann● 1600 at Burie in Suffolke Good remedies indeed had they beene soone inough applied yet not so good as those which formerly were applied to Thacker and his fellow in the aforesaid towne of Burie for publishing the bookes of Br●wn● against the service of the Church Nor was this all the fruite of so bad a doctrine For by inculcating to the people these new
daies by the Saxon Monarchs 4 Of publicke actions civill Ecclesiasticall mixt and military done on the Lords day under the first sixe Norman Kings 5 New Sabbath doctrines br●ached in England in King Johns reigne and the miraculous originall of the same 6 The prosecution of the former Story and ill successe therein of the undertakers 7 Restraine of worldly businesse on the Lords day and the other holy dayes admitted in these times in Scotland 8 Restraint of certaine servile workes on Sundayes holy dayes and the Wakes concluded in the Councell of Oxon under King Henry 3. 9 Husbandrie and legall processe prohibited on the Lords day first in the reigne of King Edward 3. 10 Se●●ing of Woollon the Lords day and the solemne Feasts forbidden first by the said King Edward as after Faires and Markets generally by King Henry 6. 11 The Cordwainers of London restrained from selling of their wares on the Lords day and some solemne feasts by King Edward the 4. and the repealing of that Law by King Henry the 8. 11 In what estate the Lords day stood both for the doctrine and the practise in the beginning of the Reigne of the said King Henry CHAP. VIII The Story of the Lords day from the reformation of Religion in this Kingdome till this present time 1 The Doctrine of the Lords day and the Sabbath deliuered by ● s●v●rall Martyrs conformably unto the judgement of the Protestants before remembred 2 The Lords day and the other holy dayes confessed by all this Kingdome in the Court of Parliament ●o have no other gr●●nd than the authoritie of the Church 3 The meaning and occasion of that clause in the Common-Prayer Booke Lord have mercy upon us c. repeated 〈…〉 end of the fourth Commandement 4 That by the Queenes Injunctions and the first Parliament of h●r reigne the Lords day was not meant for a Sabbath day 5 The doctrine in the Homilies delivered about the Lords day and the Sabbath 6 The 〈◊〉 and substance of that Homily and th●t it proves no Lords day Sabbath but the contrary 7 The first originall of 〈…〉 Sabbath●specula●ions in this Church of England by whom and for what cause invented 8 Strange and most monstrous Paradoxes preached on occasion of the former doctrines and other effects thereof 9 What care was taken of the Lords day in King James his Reigne the spreading of the former doctrines and of the Articles of Ireland 10 The Iewish Sabbath set on foot and of King Iames his Declaration about lawfull sports on the Lords day 11 What tracts were writ and published in that Princes Reigne in opposition of the Doctrines before remembred 12 In what estate the Lords day and the other holy dayes have stood in Scotland since the reformation of Religion in that Kingdome 13 Statutes about the Lords day made in the Reigne of our dread Soveraigne now being and the misconstruing of the same his Majestie reviveth and enlargeth the Declaration of King Iames. 14 An exhortation to obedience unto his Majesties most Christian purpose concludes this History An Advertisement to the Reader touching the Errata THat the Errata of this Booke are g●●wne unto so great a number is neither novum crime● nor in auditum We may with farre 〈…〉 complaine thereof than we can amend it yet for the present I have taken the best care I could although not to prevent yet to correct them Such as are me●●ely literall or no impediment to the sense are left unto the Readers care and ingenuity The rest th● Greeke alone excepted which both for accent and for letter hath beene exceeding much mistaken are here collected to thy ●and and are these th●t follow viz. PART 1. P. 8. l. 14 r. I deny not p. 9 l. 17 r. narratione p. 10 l. 34 r. posaiv●● p. 13. l. 10 r. Ames p. 16. l. 25. for which r. what p. 19. l. 4. r. wherein Bodinus p. 21 l. 2 r. multa p. 23 l. 17 r. palliate their p. 27 l. 29 del saith p. 3 r 1 32 r. S●bbatizasse p. 32 l. 22 r. which doth p. 37 r. present p. 57 l. 36 r. dictated p. 76 l. 31 r. notes it of every moneth p. 83 l. 13 r. weekes p. 94 l. 8 for one r. on the. p. 95 l. 34 r. against Marcion p. 104 in marg r. In ●●ta sua p. 114 l. ●8 r. dedicated p. 121 l. 26 r. Common-wealth p. 135 l 37 for the other r. those p. ●39 r. Iss●char p. 147 l. 3● yet was it not p. 161 l. 5 r. Tamuz p. 177 l. 5 r. Load PART 2. Epistle l. 2. r. part p. 12 l. 7 for as it is r. who as 〈◊〉 ls p. 13 l. 5 r. 〈◊〉 Christus p. 23 l. 9 del ancient p. 27 l. 37 r. from whom it seemes p. 47 l. 21 r. decretory ib. l. 25 r. neither for the. p. 49 l. 9 r. 〈◊〉 ib. 17 del Bu● p. 57 l. 5 r. the old use in p. 58 l. 5 for nor r. now ib. l. 34. r. instituted by ib. l. 35 r. in those p. 62 l. 13 r. as not to p. 66 l. 29. r. intituled p. 69. l. 1. for evill r. civill ib. 11 r. runnes ib. 19 20 for care many r. ceremony p. 71 del up p. 73 l. 22 r. on wednesdayes p. 74 l. 31 ● Iudaisme p. 75 l. 1 r. faire p. 76 l. 11. for Romish r. Iewish ib. l. 23 r. contrived ib. 34 for Two r. To. p. 82. l. 17 for or read on ib. 28 r. followers p. 88 l. 1 r. discreet behaviour p. 91 l. 10 for Easter r. Earth p. 101 l. 10 r. possessed ib. l. 23 r. fift Centurie p. 107 l. ● r. whereas tha● p. 112 l. 34 del that p. 116 l. 4 r. wholly p. 130 l. 31 for true r. it s true p. 144 l. 34 r Ovied● p. 147 l. 20 r. Chartres p. 175. l. 33 r. Ryve● p. 224 l. 13 r. envying p. 226 l. 9 for now in r. now at the first p. 230 l. 37 r. clause p. 253 r. on the lewes p. 255 l. 35 r. the Musicians head p. 258 l. 31 r. with as much violence p. 260 l. 4. for or r. on p. 263 l. 11. r. goe backe a little p. 265. l. 35. r. 560. THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH THE FIRST BOOKE From the Creation of the World to the destruction of the Temple BY PET. HEYLYN EXOD. 31. 15 16. Wherefore the children of Israel shall keepe the Sabbath to observe the Sabbath throughout their generations it is a signe betweene mee and the children of Israel for ever LONDON Printed for Henry Seile and are to bee sold at the Signe of the Tygers-head in Saint Pauls Church-yard 1636. THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH CHAP. I. That the SABBATH was not instituted in the beginning of the World 1 The entrance to the worke in hand 2 That those words Genes 2. And God blessed the seventh Day c. are there delivered as by way of anticipation 3 Anticipations in the Scripture confessed
their actions taking truce a while to see if they can otherwise compose their differences For so it passeth in edict Dominicum itaque ita semper honorabilem decernimus venerandum ut a cunctis executionibus excusetur Nulla quenquam urgeat admonitio nulla fidei jussionis flagitetur exactio taceat apparitio advocatio delitescat sit idem dies a cognitionibus alienus praeconis horrida vox sileat respirent a controversijs litigantis habeant faederis interva●●●m c. I have the rather here layd downe the Law it selfe that wee may see how punctuall the good Emperour was in silencing those troublesome suites and all preparatives or appurtenances thereunto that so men might with quieter mindes repaire unto the place of Gods publicke service yet was not the Edict so strict that neyther any kind of Pleasures were allowed upon that day as may be thought by the beginning of the Law nor any kind of secular and civill businesse to be done upon it The Emperour Constantine allowed of manumission and so did Theodosius too ●od l. 2. de ●er lex 2. Die dominico emancipare manumittere licet relique causae vel lites qui●scant so the latter Emperour Nor doe wee finde but that this Emperour Leo well allowed thereof Sure we are that he well allowed of other civill businesses when he appointed in this very Edict that such as went to Law might meete together on this day to compose their differences to shew their evidences and compare their writings And sure I am that he prohibited not all kind of pleasures but onely such as were of an obscene and unworthy nature For so it followeth in the Law first in relation unto businesses ad se se simul veniant adversarij non timentes pacta conferant transactiones loquantur Next in relation unto pleasures Nec tamen hujus religiosae di●i ocia relaxantes obscenis quemquā patimur voluptatibus detineri where note not simply voluptates but obscenae voluptates not pleasures but obscene and filthy pleasures are by him prohibited such as the Scena theatralis therein after mentioned nor civill businesse of all sorts but brangling and litigious businesses are by him forbidden as the Law makes evident Collectan And thus must Theodorus Lector be interpreted who tells us of this Emperour Leo how hee ordained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the Lords day should be kept holy by all sorts of people that it should be a non-lee day a day of rest and ease unto them which is no otherwise to be understood than as the ●aw it selfe intended however the words of Theodorus seeme to be more generall Nor was it long before this Edict or the matter of it had found good enterteinment in the Christian world the rather since those Churches which lay further off and were not under the command of the Roman Emperour taking perhaps their hint from hence had made a Canon to that purpose For in a Councell held in Aragon Anno 516. being some 47. yeares after Leos Edict it was decreed that neyther Bishop Priest or any other of the Clergy the Clergy at that time were possessed of some seates of judicature should pronounce sentence in any cause Can. 4 which should that day bee brought before them Nullus Episcoporum aut presbyterorum vel Clericorum quepropositum cujuscuna cause negotium die dominico audeat judicare This was in Anno 516. as before I sayd the second yeare of Amalaricus King of the Gothes in Spaine 6 Nor stayed they here The people of this sixt age wherein now we are began to Iudaeize a little in the imposing of so strict a rest upon this day especially in the Westerne Churches which naturally are more inclined to superstition then the Easterne nations Wherein they had so farre proceeded that it was held at last unlawfull to travaile on the Lords day with waines or horses to dresse meate or make cleane the house or meddle with any manner of domesticke businesses The third Councell held at Orleans Can. 27. Anno 540. doth informe us so and plainely thereupon determined that since these prohibitions above sayd Ad Iudaicam magis quam ad Christianam observantiam pertinere probantur did favour farre more of the Iew than of the Christian Die dominico quod ante licuit licere that therefore whatsoever had formerly beene lawfull on that day should be lawfull still Yet so that it was thought convenient that men should rest that day from husbandry and the vintage from sowing reaping hedging and such servile workes quo facilius ad ecclesiam venientes orationis gratia● vacent that so they might have better leisure to goe unto the Church and there say their Prayers This was the first restraint which hitherto we have observed whereby the Husbandman was restrained from the plough and vintage or any worke that did concerne him And this was yeelded as it seemes to give them some content at least which aimed at greater and more slavish prohibitions than those here allowed of and would not otherwise be satisfied then by grant of this Nay so farre had this superstition or superstitious conceit about this day prevailied amongst the Gothes in Spaine a sad and melancholike people that mingled and married with the Iewes who then therein dwelt that in their dotage on this day they went before the Iewes their neighbours the Sabbath not so rigorously observed by one as was the Lords day by the other The Romans in this age had utterly defeated the Vandals and their power in Africk becomming so bad neighbours to the Gothes themselves To stop them in those prosperous courses Theude the Gothis● King Anno 543. makes over into Africk with a compleate Armie The Armies neere together and occasion faire the Romans on a Sunday set upon them and put them all unto the sword the Gothes as formerly the Iewes never so much as laying hand upon their weapons or doing any thing at all in their owne defence onely in reverence to the day The generall History of Spaine so relates the story although more at large A superstition of so suddaine and so quicke a growth that whereas till this present age we cannot finde that any manner of Husbandry or country labours were forbidden as upon this day it was now thought unlawfull on the same to take a sword in hand for ones owne defence Better such doctrines had beene crushed and such Teachers silenced in the first beginnings then that their Iewish speculations should in fin● produce such sad and miserable effects Nor was Spaine onely thus infected where the Iewes now lived the French we see began to be so inclined Not onely in prohibiting things lawfull which before we specified and to the course whereof the Councell held at Orleans gave so wise a checke but by imputing such calamities as had fallen amongst them to the neglect or ill observance of this day A flash of lightning or some other fire from heaven as
it was conceived had on the Lords day made great spoyle of men and houses in the Citty of Limoges This Gregory of Tours who lived about the end of this sixt Centurie pronounceth to have fallen upon them ob diei dominici injuriam because some of them used to worke upon the Sunday But how could he tell that or who made him acquainted with Gods secret counsailes Had Gregory beene Bishop of Limoges as he was of Toures it may be Limoges might have scaped so fierce a censure and onely Tours have suffered in it For presently he addes in Turonico vero nonnulli a● hoc igne sed non die dominico adusti sunt that even in Tour● it selfe many had perished by the selfe same fire but being it fell not on the Sunday as it did at Limoges therefore that misery fell on them for some other reason Indeed he tells us of this day that being it was the day whereon God made the light and after was the witnesse of our Saviours resurrection Ideo omni fide a Christianis observari debet ne fiat in eo omne opus publicum therefore it was to be observed of every Christian no manner of publicke businesse to be done upon it A peece of new Divinity and never heard of till this age nor in any afterwards 7 Not heard of till this age but in this it was For it the 24. yeare of Gunthram King of the Burgundians Anno 588. ●onc Mati so●e●s 2● Can. 1. there was a Councell called at Mascon a towne situate in the Duchie of Burgundie as we now distinguish it wherein were present Priscus Evantuis Praetextatus and many other reverend and learned Prelates They taking into consideration how much the Lords day was of late neglected for remedy thereof ordeined that it should be observed more carefully for the times to come Which Canon I shall therefore set downe at large because it hath beene often produced as a principall ground of those precise observances which some amongst us have endeavored to force upon the consciences of weake and ignorant men It is as followeth Videmus populum Christianum temerario more diem dominicum contempt●i tradere c. It is observed that Christian people doe very rashly slight and neglect the Lords day giving themselves thereon as on other dayes to continuall labours c. Therefore let every Christian in case he carry not that name in vaine give care to our instruction knowing that we have care that you should doe well as well as power to bridle you that you doe not ill It followeth Custodite die● dominicum qui nos denuo peperit c. Keepe the Lords day the day of our new birth whereon wee were delivered from the snares of sinne Let no man meddle in litigious controversies or deale in actions or law-suites or put himselfe at all upon such an exigent that needes hee must prepare his Oxen for their daily worke but exercise your selves in hymnes and singing prayses unto God being intent thereon both in minde and body If any have a Church at hand let him goe unto it and there powre forth his soule in teares and prayers his eyes and hands being all that day lifted up to God It is the everlasting day of rest insinuated to us under the shadow of the Seventh day or Sabbath in the Law and Prophets and therefore it is very meete that wee should celebrate this day with one accord whereon we have beene made what at first wee were not Let us then offer unto God our free and voluntary service by whose great goodnesse wee are freede from the Gaole of errour not that the Lord exacts it of us that we should celebrate this day in a corporall abstinence or rest from labour who onely lookes that wee doe yeeld obedience to his holy will by which contemning earthly things he may conduct us to the heavens of his infinite mercy However if any man shall set at naught this our exhortation be he assured that God shall punish him as he hath deserved and that he shall be also subject unto the censures of the Church In case he be a Lawyer he shall loose his cause If that he be an husbandman or servant he shall be corporally punished for it but if a Clergy man or Monke he shall bee six moneths separated from the Congregation Adde here that two yeares after this being the second yeare of the second Clotaire King of France there was a Synod holden at Auxxerre a towne of Champaigne concilium Antisiodorense in the Latin writers wherein it was decreed as in this of Mascon Non licet die dominico boves jungere vel alia oper● exercare that no man should be suffered to yoake his Oxen or doe any manner of worke upon the Sunday This is the Canon so much urged I meane that of Mascon to prove that wee must spend the Lords day holily in religious exercises and that there is no part thereof which is to be imployed unto other uses But there are many things to be considered before we yeeld unto this Canon or the authority thereof some of them being of that nature that those who most insist upon it must be faine to traverse For first it was contrived of purpose with so great a strictnes to meete the better with those men which so extreamely had neglected that sacred day A sticke that bends too much one way cannot bee brought to any straightnesse till it be bent as much the other This Synod secondly was Provinciall onely and therefore can oblige none other but those for whom it was intended or such who after did submit unto it by taking it into their Canon Nor will some part thereof be approved by them who most stand upon it none being bound hereby to repaire to Church to magnifie the name of God in the Congregation but such as have some Church at hand and what will then become of those that have a mile two three or more to their parish Churches no Chappell nearer they are permitted by the Canon to abide at home As for religious duties here are none expressed as proper for the Congregation but Psalmes and hymnes and singing prayse unto the Lord and powring forth our soules unto him in teares and prayers and then what shall wee doe for preaching for preaching of the Word which wee so much call for Besides King Gunthram on whose authority this Counsell met in his Confirmatory letters doth extend this Canon as well unto the other holy dayes as unto the Sunday commanding all his Subjects Vigore huju● decreti definitionis generalis by vertue of his present mandate that on the Lords day vel in quibuscunque alijs sole●nitatibus and all solemne festivalls whatsoever they should abstaine from every kind of bodily labour save what belong'd to dressing meate But that which needes must most afflict them is that the councell doth professe this abstinence from bodily labour which is there decreed
I finde extant as a Canon of the 6 Generall councell holden in Constantinople but since both this and all the rest of the same stampe there are nine in all are thought not to belong of right unto it I have chose rather to referre it to this Theodulphus though a private man amongst whose workes I finde it in the great Bibliotheca Patrum Tom. 9. Thus in a Synod held at Coy within the realme and diocesse of Oniedo Anno 1050 it was decreed that all men should repaire to Church on the Lords day and there heare Matins Masse and other the ●anonicall houres 〈◊〉 6. as also Opus servile non excerceant nec sectentur itinera that they should doe no servile worke nor take any journey Yet with exceptions foure or five namely unlesse it were for devotions sake or to bury the dead or to visit the sicke or finally prosecreto regis vel Saracenorum impetu on speciall businesse of the Kings or to make head against the Saracens The King was much beholding to them that they would take such care of his state affaires more then some Princes might be now in case their businesse were at the disposing of particular men So had it beene decreed by severall Emperours yea and by severall Councells too which for the East part● was confirmed by Emanuel Comnenus the Easterne Emperour Anno 1174. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that all accesse to the tribunall should bee quite shut up that none of those who sate in judgement should sit on any cause that day Yet this not absolutely but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. unlesse the King shall please on any new emergent cause as many times businesse comes unlooked for to appoint it otherwise Thus also for the workes of labour fishing had beene restrained on the Lords day as a toylesome Act and on the other holy dayes as well as that yet did it please Pope Alexander the third he entred on the chaire of Rome Anno 1160. to order by his decretall that on the Lords day and the rest Decretal l. 2. 7 tit 9 c. 3. it might be lawfull unto those who dwelt upon the Coast Si halecia terrae inclinarint ●orum captioni ingruente necessitate intendere to set themselves unto their fishing in case the Herring came within their reach and the tim● was seasonable Provided that they sent a convenient portion unto the Churches round about them and unto the poore Nay even the workes of handycrafts were in some sort suffered For whereas in the Councell of Laodicea it was determined that men should rest on the Lords day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from all their handy worke and repaire to Church Balsamon tells us in his Glosse In Can. 29. Concil L●●d that so it was resolved amongst them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not absolutely but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if with conveniency they could For still saith he he lived in Anno 1191 in case men labour on that day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either because of want or any other necessity they are held excusable Lastly whereas Pope Gregory the ninth had on the Sundayes and the holy dayes commanded ut homines jumenta omnia quiescant Chroni● Aeditui that there should be a generall restraint from labour both of man beast there was a reservation also nisi urgens necessitas instet vel nisi pauperibus vel ecclesiae gratis fiat unlesse on great necessity or some good Office to be done unto the poore or the Church 9 Nor were there reservations and exceptions onely in point of businesse and nothing found in point of practise but there are many passages especially of the greatest persons most publick actions left upon record to let us know what liberty they assumed unto themselves as well on this day as the rest And in such onely shall I instance and as being most exemplary and therefore most conducing to my present purpose And first wee reade of a great battaile fought on Palme Sunday Aventi●e Hist. ● 3. Anno. 718. betweene Charles Martell Grand master of the houshould of the king of France and Hilpericus the King himselfe wherein the victory fell to Charles and yet wee reade not there of any great necessity nay of none at all but that they might on both sides have deferred the battaile had they conceived it any ●inne to fight that day Vpon the Sunday before Lent Anno 835. Ludovick the Emperour surnamed Pius or the godly together with his Prelates and others Baro● which had beene present with him at the assembly held at Theonville went on his journey unto Mets nor doe we finde that it did derogate at all from his name and piety Vpon the Sunday after Whitsontide Anno 844. Ludowick sonne unto Lotharius the Emperour made his solemne entrance into Rome the Roman Citizens attending him with their Flagges and Ensignes the Pope and Clergy staying his comming in S. Peter● Church there to entertaine him Vpon a Sunday Anno 1014. Henry the Emperour duodecem senatoribus vallatus environed with twelve of the Roman Senatours Ditmarus Hist. l. 7. came to S. Peters Church and there was crowned together with his wife by the Pope then being On Easter day in ipsa die paschalis solennitatis Anno. 1027. Conrade the Emperour was solemnely inaugurate by Pope Iohn Canutus King of England Otho Frising hist l. 6. c. 29. and Rodalph King of the Burgundians being then both present and the next Sunday after began his journey towards Germany Vpon Palme Sunday Anno. 1084. Wibert Archbishop of Ravenna was solemnly inthronized in the Chaire of Rome Vrspergens C●●onico● and the next Sunday after being Easter day Henry the third Imperiali dignitate sublimatus est was crowned Emperour On Passion Sunday Anno 1148. Lewis the King of France afterwards Canonized for a Saint made his first entrie into Hierusalem with all his Army and yet we reade not any where that it was layd in barre against him to put by his Sainting as possibly it might be now were it yet to doe What should I speake of Councells on this day assembled as that of Charles Anno 1146. for the recovery of the holy land of Tours on Trinity Sunday as wee call it now Anno 1164. against Octavian the Pseudo Pope that of Ferrara upon Passion Sunday Anno. 1177. against Frederick the Emperour or that of Paris Anno 1226. summoned by Stephen then Bishop there on the fourth Sunday in Lent for the condemning of certaine dangerous and erronious positions at that time on foote I have the rather instanced in these particulars partly because they hapned about these times when Prince and Prelate were most intent in laying more and more restraints upon their people for the more honour of this day and partly because being all of them publicke actions and such as mooved not forwards but by divers wheeles they did require a greater number of people to attend them And howsoever Councells in
profestis diebus hoe fiat secus si hoc fiat ex causa honesta intentione non corrupta à persona cui talia non sunt prohibita With which determination I conclude this Chapter CHAP. VIII The story of the Lords-day from the reformation of Religion in this Kingdome till this present time 1 The doctrine of the Sabbath and the Lords day delivered by three severall Martyrs conformably to the iudgement of the Protestants before remembred 2 The Lords day and the other holy dayes confessed by all this Kingdome in the Court of Parliament to have no other ground then the authority of the Church 3 The meaning and occasion of that clause in the Common prayer booke Lord have mercy upon us c. repeated at the end of the fourth Commandment 4 That by the Queenes Inj●nctions and the first Parliament of her reigne the Lords day was not meant for a Sabbath day 5 The doctrine in the Homilies deli●ered about the Lords day and the Sabbath 6 The summe and substance of that Homily and that it makes not any thing for a Lords day Sabbath 7 The first originall of the New Sabbath Speculations in this Church of England by whom and for what cause invented 8 Strange and most monstrous Paradoxes preached on occasion of the former doctrines and of the other effects thereof 9 What care was taken of the Lords day in King Iames his reigne the sp●eading of the doctrines and of the Articles of Ireland 10 The Iewish Sabbath set on foote and of King Iames his declaration abou● lawfull sports on the Lords day 11 What tracts were writte and published in that Princes time in opposition to the doctrines before remembred 12 In what estate the Lords day and the other holy dayes have stood in Scotland since the reformation of Religion in that Kingdome 13 Statutes about the Lords day made by our present Soveraigne and the misconstruing of the same His Majesty reviveth and enlargeth the declaration of King Iames. 14 An exhortation to obedience unto his Majesties most Christian purpose concludes this History 1 THVS are wee safely come to these present times the times of reformation wherein what ever had beene taught or done in the former dayes was publickely brought unto the test and if not well approved of layed aside either as unprofitable or plainely hurtfull So dealt the Reformatours of the Church of England as with other things with that which wee have now in hand the Lords day and the other holy dayes keeping the dayes as many of them as were thought convenient for the advancement of true godlinesse and increase of piety but paring off those superstitious conceits and matters of opinion which had beene enterteined about them But first before wee come to this wee will by way of preparation lay downe the iudgements of some men in the present point men of good quality in their times and such as were content to bee made a sacrifice in the Common cause Of these I shall take notice of three particularly according to to the severall times in the which they lived And first wee will beginne with Master Fryth who suffered in the yeere 1533 who in his declaration of Baptisme thus declares himselfe P. 96. Our forefathers saith hee which were in the beginning of the Church did abrogate the Sabbath to the intent that men might have an ensample of Christian liberty c. Howbeit because it was necessary that a day should be reserved in which the people should come together to heare the word of God they ordayned insteed of the Sabbath which was Saturday the next day following which is Sunday And although they might have kept the Saturday with the Iew as a thing indifferent yet they did much better Some three yeeres after him anno 1536 being the 28 of Henry the eight suffered Master Tyndall who in his answer to Sir Thomas More hath resolved it thus Pag. 287. As for the Sabbath we be Lords over the Sabbath and may yet change it into Munday or into any other day as wee see neede or may make every tenth day holy day onely If we see cause why Neither was there any cause to change it from the Saturday but to put a difference betweene us and the Iewes neither need wee any holy day at all if the people might bee taught without it Last of all Bishop Hooper sometimes Bishop of Gloucester who suffered in Queene Maries reigne doth in a treatise by him written on the ten Commandements and printed in the yeere 1550 goe the selfe same way Pag 103. Wee may not thinke saith hee that God gave any more holinesse to the Sabbath then to the other dayes For if yee consider Friday Saturday or Sunday in as much as they be dayes and the worke of God the one is no more ●oly then the other but that day is alwayes most holy in the which we most apply and give our selves unto holy works To that end did hee sanctify the Sabbath day not that wee should give our selves to illenesse or such Ethnicall pastime as is now used amongst Ethnicall people but being free that day from the travailles of this world wee might consider the works and benefits of God with thankesgiving heare the word of God honour him and feare him then to learne who and where bee the poore of Christ that want our helpe Thus they and they amongst them have resolved on these foure conclusions First ●hat one day is no more holy then another the Sunday then the Saturday or the Friday further than they are set apart for holy uses Secondly that the Lords day hath no institution from divine authority but was ordained by our fore fathers in the beginning of the Church that so the people might have a Day to come together and heare Gods Word thirdly that still the Church hath power to change the day from Sunday unto Monday or what day shee will And lastly that one day in seven is not the Morall part of the fourth Commandement for M. Tyndall faith expressely that by the Church of God each tenth day onely may be kept holy if wee see cause why So that the mervaile is the greater that any man should now affirme as some men have done that they are willing to lay downe both their Lives and Livings in maintenance of those contrary Opinions which in these latter dayes have been taken up 2 Now that which was affirmed by them in their particulars was not long afterwards made good by the generall Bodie of this Church and State the King the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and all the Commons met in Parliament 5. 6. Edw. 6. cap. 3. anno the fift and sixt of King Edward the sixt where to the honour of Almighty God it was thus enacted For as much as men bee not at all times so mindfull to laud and praise God so readie to resort to heare Gods Holy Word and to come to the holy Communion